News

Arctic winters - once considered the most stable and predictable part of the region’s climate - are becoming warm, wet, and unstable.
As temperatures, biodiversity losses, and sea levels rise globally, scientists are concerned about the likelihood of abrupt ...
A new commentary published in Nature Communications by Dr. James Bradley, Reader in Environmental Science at Queen Mary ...
Climate change is likely to have an explosive consequence: volcanic eruptions. Antarctic glaciers have been slowly melting as ...
The most alarming case may be West Antarctica, where more than 100 active volcanoes lie buried beneath the ice. One glacier ...
Melting glaciers in Greenland are unleashing hidden methane and shifting soils from carbon sinks to warming sources.
As global temperatures increase because of climate change, glaciers around the world are melting—contributing to rising sea levels, more extreme weather events, and habitat loss for all sorts of ...
The 2015 Paris agreement’s goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius was thought to be the threshold for averting severe climate change impacts. But new research says even that ...
Glaciers will continue melting for centuries even if global temperatures stabilise immediately, according to a new study. About 40 per cent of the world's glacier mass is already set to disappear ...
Even best-case levels of global warming would mean 'catastrophic' sea level rise, study says “There’s very little that we’re observing that gives us hope here,” one study author said.
Sea ice extent in the Arctic has decreased by about 40 percent since 1979. New technologies are being deployed to regrow it.